Premium Only Content
Gang Busters 1953-08-08 (801) The Case Of A Thief To Catch A Thief
Gang Busters was an American dramatic radio program heralded as "the only national program that brings you authentic police case histories." It premiered on January 15, 1936, and was broadcast over 21 years through November 27, 1957. Only about 88 episodes have survived.
History
So-called "true crime" magazines were highly popular in the 1930s and the movie G Men starring James Cagney, released in the spring of 1935, had proven to be a big hit. Producer-director Phillips H. Lord thought there was a place on radio for a show of the same type. To emphasize the authenticity of his dramatizations, Lord produced the initial radio show, G-Men, in close association with FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover. Hoover was not particularly favorable to the notion of such a program, but U. S. Attorney General Homer Stille Cummings gave it his full support.
G-Men dramatized FBI cases, but Hoover insisted that only closed cases would be used. Hoover also demanded that he or a top-level aide review and approve every script. Hoover preferred that scripts downplay gunfights and car chases and spend more time on systematic investigation and legwork. Agents should be shown as intelligent, hard-working, and essentially faceless cogs in his technically savvy crime-fighting organization. Those restrictions hampered Lord, who saw his creation as a public service, but one that had to entertain as well as inform.
The first program dramatized the story of the notorious gangster John Dillinger, who was tracked down by FBI agents and shot to death outside the Biograph Theater on July 24, 1934. The second covered Lester Joseph Gillis, aka Baby Face Nelson. Although the shows were a hit with the public, there were naysayers, some of whom deplored this sensational new style of radio show. Hyper-sensitive to any criticism, Hoover almost squelched the project and made life more and more difficult for Lord.
It was just G-Men that used only FBI cases and was subject to Hoover's whims and restrictions. Gang Busters featured interesting and dramatic crimes from the files of law enforcement organizations all over the country. G-Men was on NBC Radio from July 20 to October 12, 1935, sponsored by Chevrolet.
Gang Busters often featured prominent names in radio broadcasting, many of whom also starred in movies and television. Two of the most famous were Richard Widmark and Art Carney. Widmark was typecast as a villain for many years, but finally managed to break that mold. Carney became especially famous for his role with Jackie Gleason on The Honeymooners, but he had a much broader career than that. Joan Banks, who later played many TV roles, was a regular cast member.
Her husband, Frank Lovejoy, also appeared often, and later went on to star in many movies and an ABC crime drama. Larry Haines was another regular on the show. He went on to an extensive career in TV soap operas. A lesser-known actor on the show was Leon Janney, who apparently played both juvenile roles and ones requiring an unusual accent.
-
LIVE
LumpyPotatoX2
1 hour agoArena Breakout: Infinite - #RumbleGaming
551 watching -
LIVE
GamingWithHemp
1 hour agoCall of Duty BO6 Zombies episode #7
539 watching -
39:47
Brewzle
23 hours agoPennsylvania Wouldn’t Let Me Film…So I Went Bourbon Hunting in NY
356 -
10:12
Space Ice
20 hours agoBallistic: Ecks vs Sever - Underrated Masterpiece Or Incoherent Mess?
9248 -
2:43:07
RG_GerkClan
3 hours agoLIVE: Lets Get to 500 FOLLOWS! - Escape From Tarkov - Gerk Clan
4.32K1 -
LIVE
Vigilant News Network
18 hours agoHillary Clinton EXPOSED In Another Massive Hoax | The Daily Dose
2,436 watching -
1:00:17
Trumpet Daily
1 day ago $5.12 earnedRINOs Are Trump’s Biggest Enemy Now - Trumpet Daily | Nov. 22, 2024
3.32K16 -
17:47
RealReaper
12 hours ago $0.02 earnedGladiator 2 Another Pointless Sequel
1131 -
45:45
PMG
10 hours ago"Hannah Faulkner and Stephanie Nash | No Farms No Food"
166 -
27:11
Degenerate Plays
1 day agoReturn Of The Online Girlfriends - Stellar Blade : Part 30
71